Yes.

Gov. Hobbs’ administration submitted a report to the Arizona Legislature in January estimating that state agencies would need an additional $339 million to maintain operations or programs. These supplemental appropriations—a routine part of the budgeting process—cover costs not initially accounted for when the current state budget was approved by the Legislature and governor in June.
Agencies often request supplemental funds in September as they are able to calculate more accurate projections of their expenses for that fiscal year. This is especially common for large state programs, which can have caseload numbers vary by year.
Exactly how much supplemental funding state agencies are awarded is negotiated by the Legislature and the Governor’s Office in the spring as they prepare the next fiscal year’s budget, based on requests submitted by the agencies.
This brief responds to conversations such as this one.
The Arizona Center for Investigative Reporting partners with Gigafact to produce fact briefs, or quick-response fact checks, about trending claims relating to Arizona.
Sources
- Arizona Office of Gov. Katie Hobbs, Correspondence with Arizona Center for Investigative Reporting
- Arizona Legislature, Joint Appropriations Committee Meeting Jan. 21, 2025
- Arizona Joint Legislative Budget Committee, FY 2026 JLBC Baseline with Executive Comparison
- Arizona Joint Legislative Budget Committee, Budgeting Process
- Arizona Advisory Council on Indian Healthcare, The State of Arizona Budget and the Legislature
- Arizona Joint Legislative Budget Committee, FY2023 State General Fund Budget Summary
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The Arizona Center for Investigative Reporting is partnering with Gigafact to produce timely fact briefs, or quick-response fact checks, about trending claims relating to Arizona.



